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What's Next After Bill Cosby Is Found Guilty

The next steps for Bill Cosby's case after hearing the guilty verdict against the comedian.

(Published Thursday, April 26, 2018)

Women campaigning against sexual assault and harassment hailed Bill Cosby's conviction as a validation of the #MeToo movement and an emboldening signal to other victims unsure if they should come forward to seek justice.

"It takes a lot of courage to do that, but this will encourage other women who now see that having a powerful legal team and being a celebrity doesn't buy you a pass," said Debra Katz, a Washington, D.C., attorney specializing in sexual-harassment law.

Cosby, for decades one of America's most beloved comedians, was convicted on Thursday of drugging and molesting Temple University employee Andrea Constand at his suburban Philadelphia home in 2004. He claimed the encounter was consensual, and his lawyers attacked Constand as a liar and a "con artist" who framed him to get rich.

This was Cosby's second trial on the sexual-assault charges. The first ended with a hung jury 10 months ago, before #MeToo became a global movement.

In the time since Cosby's first trial, sexual-misconduct allegations have toppled countless influential men in entertainment, politics, the media and other sectors. Cosby's conviction came in the first big celebrity trial since the #MeToo movement exploded and gave abused women a collective voice.

In the pre-#MeToo era, said Katz, women who reported rape and harassment "were reflexively disbelieved and smeared, particularly when they raised allegations against celebrities and powerful men."

"As a result of the courage of millions of women who spoke out ... our society has changed," she said. "In effect, this jury agreed that Time's Up."

Sandra Park, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union's Women's Rights Project, said the #MeToo movement had helped educate the public about the pervasiveness of sexual assault and the factors that prompt some victims to delay coming forward for long periods of time.

"The tactic of villainizing the victim has traditionally worked — so you would look for the perfect case that was reported right away," Park said. "#MeToo has showed that there's a wide range of sexual-assault cases that don't fit in a neat box."

Constand, a former Temple women's basketball administrator, said Cosby knocked her out with three blue pills he called "your friends" and then penetrated her with his fingers as she lay immobilized, unable to resist or say no.

Although only Constand's case went to trial, more than 60 other women came forward over the past few years to accuse Cosby of drugging and molesting them over five decades. Their accusations against a well-known superstar were a precursor to #MeToo.

"One of the big lessons we've been learning over last six months is that people we admire, people we feel we know well, can also do bad things," said Fatima Goss-Graves, president of the National Women's Law Center.

But Campoamor, in an email, said her elation was tempered by memories of her own experience, when she had to wait a year for a rape kit to be processed and then was told there wasn't enough evidence to proceed.

"So when a man in a position of power, a man like Bill Cosby, is held accountable for the trauma he inflicted on his victims, I feel hope," Campoamor wrote. "But it isn't 'mission accomplished.' There is still work to be done, and we must do that work until these convictions are no longer the exception to the rule, but the rule itself."

The Cosby verdict is likely to energize efforts to expand and strengthen #MeToo. Several leading feminist groups have formed an Enough is Enough coalition, and they met this week to advocate for legislation to address sexual assault and harassment and to find new ways to support women who have experienced such abuse.

The Associated Press does not typically identify people who say they are victims of sexual assault unless they grant permission, as Constand has done.